The perception of their body among infants is linked to proprioception, or rather related to the information detected by peripheral receptors concerning the control of position, movement and balance of the body. Therefore, it consists of a perceptual component – which indicates how the size and shape of one’s own body is viewed an attitudinal component – which defines what one thinks and knows about his/her own body an affective component – in which the feelings one has towards his/her own body emerge and a behavioural component, which includes, for example, nutrition and physical activity. The body image is composed of the characteristics of the person as a whole. The body image is “the picture we have in our minds of the size, shape and form of our bodies and to our feelings concerning these characteristics and our constituent body parts” (Peter Slade, 1988). Finally, the third objective was to analyse the distribution of actual and perceived BMI among the male and female population in relation to their age. The second objective was to examine the altered perception of BMI, if overestimated or underestimated. The statistical processing of the data allowed us to respond to the first objective of the study, namely to observe the BMI perceived by each individual student and the actual BMI. The significance of the observed and calculated data was evaluated by the Pearson chi-square test, and a p-value <0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.
![cosi e la vita obese cosi e la vita obese](https://www.fondazioneveronesi.it/uploads/2021/03/01/obesita-covid-19.jpg)
The students were given a paper questionnaire from which we later obtained the following data: gender Q1, age Q2, height Q3, body weight Q4 and perception of their BMI Q5. The following observational, descriptive, retrospective and multicenter study was created with the aim to describe the reality of adolescents regarding BMI, this by examining a sample consisting of 422 students in total, whom 266 were males and 156 were females, aged between 17 and 19 years. Such behaviour, in serious cases, may interfere with the everyday life of the individual. In the adolescent this causes a constant comparison between their own body and the ideal one, resulting in developing an idea of self which may lead to a sense of dissatisfaction with their own physical form. Body image is influenced by social, psychological and emotional factors through interaction with peers, parents and the mass media.
![cosi e la vita obese cosi e la vita obese](https://www.salutelab.it/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/obesita-covid-19-696x465.jpg)
It is in this exact period of time that one's body image starts to develop. Adolescence is the transition period from childhood to adulthood, which involves a transformation of the body.